The “Chopped: Impossible” contestants had to concoct a dessert using a meat lover’s sub sandwich, ostrich egg, chunky peanut butter and balsamic vinegar.

Major also will compete on "Cutthroat Kitchen" 10 p.m. Sunday on the Food Network in an episode called "The Hunt For Bread October," says Michael Anderson, Reds public relations manager.

Judge Robert Irvine, host of Food Network’s “Restaurant: Impossible,” said he loved the peanut butter cream. Earlier on the show, Major impressed judges with his fried crawfish and grits with chicken rillette.

Major, a former U.S. Navy cook, and 11 other “Chopped” champs have returned to compete – four at a time -- for a place in the finals, as I reported last week. He will cook against winners from the Oct. 22 and Nov. 5 episodes in the finale.

The Nov. 12 winner gets $15,000 and a cook-off against Irvine. If Irvine loses, the “Chopped: Impossible” champ wins an additional $25,000.

“I want to go against Robert Irvine,” Major said on the show last week. “I think a U.S. Navy man against a British naval man (Irvine) would be a heck of a battle.”

Major started as a dishwasher at 14 before going into the Navy. In 2014 he won a "Chopped" competition against three other baseball park chefs working for Delaware North Companies Sportservice.

People may know Over-the-Rhine for its great restaurants and bars, but it has a history as rich as its exciting nightlife. The Over-the-Rhine Museum, slated to open in 2020 with a pop-up version available in 2016, will capture the community's extensive past with the help of local residents, historians, designers and business owners.

It’s elementary: When WKRC-TV (Channel 12) broadcasts prime-time Bengals games, some of your favorite shows get punted to another station or time period.

On Thursday, when Channel 12 airs the Bengals-Browns, here’s how you’ll find the season premieres for “Elementary” and “Mom,” plus new episodes of the “Big Bang Theory,”“Life in Pieces” and “Entertainment Tonight”: